I was talking about people who want to simultaneously maintain that philosophy is both too hard/heady for them (therefore inaccessible) but also just a matter of opinion (therefore infinitely accessible). Clearly these positions cannot be maintained simultaneously. — Artemis
In which case they cannot have an opinion thereof. — Artemis
Yes they can. One is an opinion about the modalities of the rule set and the other is an opinion about the meta data. Two different areas of knowledge/opinion. — Isaac
Yes they can. One is an opinion about the modalities of the rule set and the other is an opinion about the meta data. Two different areas of knowledge/opinion. — Isaac
a: What is your opinion on the Jabberwocky?
b: Pretty negative.
a: Do you know what the Jabberwocky is?
b: Not a clue.
a: That means you have no idea what you have a negative opinion about or what it even means to have a negative opinion thereof. Basically, your opinion is not really an opinion at all, because it is about nothing and means nothing.
Artemis
19 minutes ago — Artemis
it must be explicitly connected, presumably empirically, to the real world. If it is not, then it is only of interest to people who want to explore those ideas and worry about its relevance later, ie philosophers.
For non-philosophers it may appear no more than an academic exercise. and a meaningless one at that. — A Seagull
I have the impression that most people don’t even know what philosophy is about. — Pfhorrest
Way to miss the point. — Artemis
Navel-gazing, time wasted. — NOS4A2
They may be right (it's up to the philosophers to decide that), but oh, how sweet this navel-gazing is.
This is all to counter the idea that you could call philosophy an opinion but not physics. As you suggested above. — Artemis
Given my belief in model dependent realism, there is no sense in which something is fact, as opposed to opinion, other than in degree. So for me (and I think colloquially many others) the degree of intersubjectivity determines the place on the fact-opinion scale. — Isaac
IF someone asks me if physics is 'just opinion' I can justifiable answer that it is not, on the basis of this meta data without needing to understand any of the actual data. — Isaac
This is all to counter the idea that you could call philosophy an opinion but not physics. As you suggested above.
Mode of thinking sounds just like another way of saying opinion, btw. But a=a is a fact of the universe. A law which all things abide by. A more certain law than any of the things physics could possibly point to. — Artemis
So please make up your mind what your position is. — Artemis
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